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PROFESSOR: All right,
let's get started.

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00:00:28,330 --> 00:00:37,920
I want to finish talking about
Konrad Lorenz' jackdaws today,

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00:00:37,920 --> 00:00:42,130
and maybe I hope to be able
to start with the next topic,

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because at the beginning
of the next hour

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we're going to watch a video,
so we'll have less time

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to go over some
of the questions.

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00:00:54,090 --> 00:00:57,810
We just got started
with this last time.

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The reading was
from Konrad Lorenz'

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little book, called
King Solomon's Ring,

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00:01:03,730 --> 00:01:08,750
published a long time ago, but
very interesting descriptions

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00:01:08,750 --> 00:01:10,990
of his early studies of animals.

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Remember, jackdaws are a
crow-lake corvid living

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in Europe.

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They nest in high places,
not always on a cliff face,

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like the Kittiwake gull, but
often high in trees, and often

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00:01:30,650 --> 00:01:35,670
in the area where he studied
them, they nest in rooftops.

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They often live near humans.

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He starts, remember,
by talking about play.

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00:01:45,470 --> 00:01:47,760
I introduced this last time.

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00:01:51,140 --> 00:01:53,770
If anybody gets interested
in play behavior,

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00:01:53,770 --> 00:01:57,570
it would be interesting to
look in the recent literature

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00:01:57,570 --> 00:02:00,770
and see if there are any
new studies of play that

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00:02:00,770 --> 00:02:03,700
have something
interesting to say.

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00:02:03,700 --> 00:02:11,000
If you are interested in that
and do some searches online,

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00:02:11,000 --> 00:02:14,140
please go over it
with me, and I can

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00:02:14,140 --> 00:02:17,560
let you know
whether part of that

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00:02:17,560 --> 00:02:20,220
would be an interesting
project report.

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00:02:23,160 --> 00:02:27,960
What made jackdaws
such interesting pets

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00:02:27,960 --> 00:02:32,930
for this young man in
Germany, Konrad Lorenz, who

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had liked animals since
he was very young?

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00:02:35,720 --> 00:02:44,215
He was just 22 in 1925 when he
began studying these animals.

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00:02:48,690 --> 00:02:54,040
What were the properties that
make jackdaws interesting?

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00:02:54,040 --> 00:02:56,600
Well for one thing,
like other corvids,

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they're very
intelligent animals.

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00:03:00,260 --> 00:03:03,470
What makes dogs so interesting?

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00:03:03,470 --> 00:03:05,330
Part of it is
their intelligence.

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00:03:05,330 --> 00:03:06,595
Dogs are very smart.

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00:03:06,595 --> 00:03:11,000
They're probably as
smart as chimpanzees--

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00:03:11,000 --> 00:03:13,140
somewhat different
types of intelligence.

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00:03:13,140 --> 00:03:15,686
They're specialized in
different ways--yes?

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AUDIENCE: Also they're faithful.

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00:03:17,090 --> 00:03:21,400
They're loyal to their humans.

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00:03:21,400 --> 00:03:24,330
PROFESSOR: Dogs are probably
more faithful than jackdaws,

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00:03:24,330 --> 00:03:28,450
but believe me if a jackdaw is
attached, you're quite right.

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They will definitely stick
close to one human being.

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Their attack behavior is
a little more specialized.

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They can even attack their
own owner, as you will see.

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00:03:43,250 --> 00:03:44,142
Yes?

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AUDIENCE: I noticed
that they imprinted

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on the human [INAUDIBLE].

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PROFESSOR: Whenever there's
a lot of other noise,

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I can't understand anything.

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AUDIENCE: That it really
imprinted on the human,

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and almost thought of itself
as a human-- like when

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it would walk.

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PROFESSOR: That's part
of their social nature.

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They're very social, like dogs.

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And like dogs, they
can imprint on humans.

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A young dog, a puppy, as
I mentioned last time,

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if they're socialized
to humans very early,

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they treat humans as
part of their pack.

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In fact, humans
will be the alphas.

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The alpha male might be a
female human, but the alpha male

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00:04:32,590 --> 00:04:36,730
to a dog is the dominant
animal in the pack.

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00:04:36,730 --> 00:04:39,150
That's the way some
dogs, some species,

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00:04:39,150 --> 00:04:45,180
become much more centered
on one owner, the master,

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than other dogs.

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Some dogs just simply become
attached to the whole family.

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Even a dog that's very,
very attached-- like

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say, a doberman-- to one master,
they're still social animals.

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They live in a larger pack,
and they will defend the pack,

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00:05:05,280 --> 00:05:10,370
so they are a pretty good
guard dog in that respect.

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They're very social.

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They're very
intelligent, and they

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are adapted to
living near humans.

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They have been for a long time.

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In Altenburg, Germany, where
Lorenz lived at that time,

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there was many jackdaws
living in different rooftops

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00:05:25,820 --> 00:05:26,505
in the town.

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00:05:30,770 --> 00:05:36,210
This is a quote from Lorenz--
"like the stones of a mosaic,

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the inherited and acquired
elements of a young bird's

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00:05:41,680 --> 00:05:45,490
behavior are pieced together
to produce a perfect pattern,

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00:05:45,490 --> 00:05:50,680
but in a bird that's
been reared by hand,

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00:05:50,680 --> 00:05:52,840
the natural harmony
of this design

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00:05:52,840 --> 00:05:56,340
is necessarily
somewhat disturbed."

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00:05:56,340 --> 00:05:59,420
I suppose if you're interested
in natural behavior of dogs,

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00:05:59,420 --> 00:06:02,590
you could say a dog's behaviors
is pretty disturbed by being

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00:06:02,590 --> 00:06:04,700
raised by humans,
too, so you don't

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00:06:04,700 --> 00:06:08,490
see all the natural
behaviors of a dog that's

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00:06:08,490 --> 00:06:11,350
become a human pet.

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00:06:11,350 --> 00:06:14,450
But it's more dramatic
in the case of the birds,

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and Lorenz goes through this.

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00:06:21,260 --> 00:06:24,580
The disturbances he talks
about are all results

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00:06:24,580 --> 00:06:31,310
of early learning, causing
fixation on the wrong species.

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00:06:31,310 --> 00:06:33,950
It's very interesting.

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00:06:33,950 --> 00:06:36,070
We think of imprinting
as a single thing,

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00:06:36,070 --> 00:06:39,110
and when it was
discovered with birds,

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00:06:39,110 --> 00:06:44,200
as we'll see in the video, next
class, where Lorenz discovered

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00:06:44,200 --> 00:06:52,190
this in ducks, in the
case of the jackdaws,

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00:06:52,190 --> 00:06:55,470
he observed that
it's not just related

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00:06:55,470 --> 00:06:58,490
to fixating on a parent.

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00:06:58,490 --> 00:07:01,020
They can be fixated
for different functions

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00:07:01,020 --> 00:07:01,935
on different animals.

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00:07:05,690 --> 00:07:08,130
He wrote a pretty
well-known paper-- at least

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00:07:08,130 --> 00:07:12,140
it's well known in German-- "Der
Kumpan in der Umwelt de Terre,"

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but it's roughly translated
Companionship in Bird Life.

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He describes many
of these things

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00:07:21,400 --> 00:07:25,040
in that scientific paper.

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00:07:25,040 --> 00:07:27,630
For example, a bird
that's imprinted

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00:07:27,630 --> 00:07:31,300
on humans, when it
reaches sexual maturity,

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00:07:31,300 --> 00:07:36,480
may court only humans
as potential mates.

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00:07:36,480 --> 00:07:42,740
He describes jackdaws
and the dramatic way

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00:07:42,740 --> 00:07:45,470
these fixations are manifested.

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00:07:45,470 --> 00:07:49,520
In fact, they can be imprinted
on a particular human.

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00:07:49,520 --> 00:07:55,080
One became fixated on a
maid that worked for him,

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00:07:55,080 --> 00:07:59,830
but then moved to another
location-- left his household,

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00:07:59,830 --> 00:08:03,520
and the bird
eventually found her

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00:08:03,520 --> 00:08:07,840
and tried to mate with her over
there-- but only for mating.

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00:08:07,840 --> 00:08:13,060
Then it would fly back,
because it lived with Lorenz

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00:08:13,060 --> 00:08:15,120
in an aviary attached
to his house.

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00:08:20,090 --> 00:08:22,495
Then he describes
this jackdaw pet

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00:08:22,495 --> 00:08:27,360
that he called Jacques-- turned
out to be female actually--

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00:08:27,360 --> 00:08:29,770
courted only humans for mating.

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00:08:29,770 --> 00:08:34,409
But when he wanted to fly,
he was fixated on crows,

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00:08:34,409 --> 00:08:36,919
because apparently when
he first learned to fly,

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00:08:36,919 --> 00:08:42,559
it was crows flying over
that initiated his interest.

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00:08:42,559 --> 00:08:43,980
He was just learning to fly.

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00:08:43,980 --> 00:08:46,280
He flew with the crows.

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00:08:46,280 --> 00:08:50,320
He had a lot of trouble getting
Jacques to give up that habit,

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00:08:50,320 --> 00:08:55,130
so he often would fly with the
crows until he became lost.

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00:08:57,850 --> 00:09:00,890
Sometimes Lorenz
would go out and make

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00:09:00,890 --> 00:09:04,735
jackdaw calls, trying to find
Jacques, get him to come back.

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00:09:12,800 --> 00:09:16,160
Why would we expect
care of young,

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00:09:16,160 --> 00:09:20,190
which we call brood tending
in ethology to be largely

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00:09:20,190 --> 00:09:22,125
innate in many animal species?

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00:09:24,832 --> 00:09:26,480
AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE].

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00:09:26,480 --> 00:09:32,670
PROFESSOR: Like the species
we study in the lab,

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00:09:32,670 --> 00:09:35,920
you can take a hamster
and breed them,

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00:09:35,920 --> 00:09:45,120
and they can raise young
though they've never

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00:09:45,120 --> 00:09:47,270
grown up in families.

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00:09:47,270 --> 00:09:51,610
They leave the mother
after weaning and separate,

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00:09:51,610 --> 00:09:53,820
so they don't live socially.

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00:09:53,820 --> 00:09:54,700
They're solitary.

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00:09:54,700 --> 00:09:56,650
They live in a solitary
way, although they

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00:09:56,650 --> 00:10:00,590
do live in proximity
to other hamsters,

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00:10:00,590 --> 00:10:03,910
from what we know about them.

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00:10:03,910 --> 00:10:05,950
It's been difficult to
study wild hamsters,

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00:10:05,950 --> 00:10:07,720
because they live in Syria.

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00:10:07,720 --> 00:10:10,010
As you know, Syria's
been a difficult place

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00:10:10,010 --> 00:10:16,470
for people from Europe or
America to go to study animals.

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00:10:16,470 --> 00:10:21,010
I had one student
that went there

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00:10:21,010 --> 00:10:23,160
when it was a little
less dangerous,

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00:10:23,160 --> 00:10:26,800
but it was difficult
to get a visa,

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00:10:26,800 --> 00:10:29,800
so he just went in from
Lebanon and managed

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00:10:29,800 --> 00:10:32,790
to interact with people there.

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00:10:32,790 --> 00:10:35,570
He brought back a group of
hamsters for the first time

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00:10:35,570 --> 00:10:42,450
since the initial capture
of hamsters in the 1930s.

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00:10:42,450 --> 00:10:45,460
Why would it be
expected to be innate,

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00:10:45,460 --> 00:10:48,180
and how would you look
for learned components

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00:10:48,180 --> 00:10:48,850
of the behavior?

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00:10:52,150 --> 00:10:57,150
Why would it almost have to
be innate in many species?

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00:10:57,150 --> 00:11:02,110
Because once they mate, they're
going to have the babies.

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00:11:02,110 --> 00:11:05,618
If they don't know how
to take care of them,

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00:11:05,618 --> 00:11:09,810
if they don't have instinctive
ability to take care of them,

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00:11:09,810 --> 00:11:13,600
the babies are not
going to survive.

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00:11:13,600 --> 00:11:16,010
Their reproduction
will be unsuccessful.

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00:11:16,010 --> 00:11:20,506
So they have evolved to be
able to take care of them

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00:11:20,506 --> 00:11:23,390
on the first try, but it doesn't
mean they don't learn anything.

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00:11:27,810 --> 00:11:31,790
So what do you look for?

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00:11:31,790 --> 00:11:37,160
Some of you are in labs where
you're studying mice or rats.

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00:11:37,160 --> 00:11:41,370
I don't think there's
any hamsters now,

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00:11:41,370 --> 00:11:43,440
because I don't keep
the hamsters anymore.

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00:11:43,440 --> 00:11:50,620
But for years I had them,
and it was very evident to me

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00:11:50,620 --> 00:11:53,780
that things were being learned.

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I can tell you several things.

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One is I would notice
that first litters,

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00:12:01,050 --> 00:12:07,640
I would discover injured
pups much more frequently.

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00:12:07,640 --> 00:12:12,430
They were handled more
roughly by the mother.

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00:12:12,430 --> 00:12:19,350
If I would separate the
mother from the nest--

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00:12:19,350 --> 00:12:23,230
and sometimes I did that because
of experiments I was conducting

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00:12:23,230 --> 00:12:28,080
and then put the mother back--
an inexperienced mother-- if it

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00:12:28,080 --> 00:12:30,300
was her first litter--
would be much more

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00:12:30,300 --> 00:12:34,310
likely to lose her
maternal mood altogether.

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00:12:34,310 --> 00:12:36,530
She would treat her pups
like they were insects,

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00:12:36,530 --> 00:12:38,836
and she would attack them.

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00:12:38,836 --> 00:12:40,460
Sometimes that would
be brief, and then

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00:12:40,460 --> 00:12:45,310
she would recover her
maternal mood and go back,

195
00:12:45,310 --> 00:12:49,870
but that almost never happened
in second and third litters.

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00:12:49,870 --> 00:12:52,495
Hamsters are capable of
having multiple litters.

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00:12:52,495 --> 00:12:55,770
They're very prolific
in their reproduction.

198
00:12:55,770 --> 00:12:59,652
Let's see what
else I wrote here.

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00:12:59,652 --> 00:13:01,360
They of course, have
to be able to do it,

200
00:13:01,360 --> 00:13:03,880
because the first time
they're exposed to young

201
00:13:03,880 --> 00:13:05,300
is when they start having them.

202
00:13:11,090 --> 00:13:14,010
It's not completely
innate in many animals,

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00:13:14,010 --> 00:13:17,300
especially primates
were more is learned.

204
00:13:17,300 --> 00:13:22,080
It's not that humans don't
have brood-tending instincts,

205
00:13:22,080 --> 00:13:27,230
but abnormalities are much more
likely in the higher animals,

206
00:13:27,230 --> 00:13:32,860
because so much more is learned,
and some of that learning

207
00:13:32,860 --> 00:13:36,140
can not be beneficial
for brood tending.

208
00:13:44,090 --> 00:13:49,160
Any individual variations
you can see among-- let's say

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00:13:49,160 --> 00:13:54,980
you have a litter of animals,
and you study all the females?

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00:13:57,950 --> 00:14:02,300
You get them to mate, and
they all have litters.

211
00:14:02,300 --> 00:14:07,120
You will pretty soon see
individual differences

212
00:14:07,120 --> 00:14:08,430
appearing.

213
00:14:08,430 --> 00:14:11,360
You have to be sharp
to notice them,

214
00:14:11,360 --> 00:14:13,200
but there will be
individual differences

215
00:14:13,200 --> 00:14:17,680
because there are--
even though genetically

216
00:14:17,680 --> 00:14:20,510
they're very uniform,
hamsters more than just

217
00:14:20,510 --> 00:14:24,775
about any other
laboratory animal.

218
00:14:24,775 --> 00:14:26,650
One reason they're a
good experimental animal

219
00:14:26,650 --> 00:14:30,000
is because of that
genetic uniformity.

220
00:14:30,000 --> 00:14:36,440
They all arose from, I believe,
a single male and two females

221
00:14:36,440 --> 00:14:41,720
who were captured
near Aleppo, Syria,

222
00:14:41,720 --> 00:14:46,740
by an Israeli scientist
named Aharoni,

223
00:14:46,740 --> 00:14:52,760
and he introduced them
for laboratory work,

224
00:14:52,760 --> 00:14:55,120
and they spread to other
countries, including America.

225
00:15:01,850 --> 00:15:04,760
Let's talk about a
different kind of learning.

226
00:15:04,760 --> 00:15:07,420
How do young jackdaws come
to recognize predators?

227
00:15:09,995 --> 00:15:14,910
The very interesting interaction
between innate components

228
00:15:14,910 --> 00:15:20,440
and learned
components-- and Lorenz

229
00:15:20,440 --> 00:15:29,960
described his experience with
an innate reaction of jackdaws.

230
00:15:32,630 --> 00:15:34,150
You should know that story.

231
00:15:34,150 --> 00:15:35,510
I give the pages, there.

232
00:15:40,030 --> 00:15:45,180
Certain stimuli that
could cause the jackdaws

233
00:15:45,180 --> 00:15:48,350
in the vicinity to attack him.

234
00:15:48,350 --> 00:15:52,920
What was he doing that caused
the jackdaws he was rearing--

235
00:15:52,920 --> 00:15:55,560
so they were very
familiar with him--

236
00:15:55,560 --> 00:15:58,482
to start treating
him like an enemy?

237
00:15:58,482 --> 00:16:01,428
AUDIENCE: He would
hold the young chicks,

238
00:16:01,428 --> 00:16:05,850
and the chick had a very
dark, black object, really--

239
00:16:05,850 --> 00:16:07,490
PROFESSOR: Yeah,
didn't even have

240
00:16:07,490 --> 00:16:09,490
to be a jackdaw-like object.

241
00:16:09,490 --> 00:16:11,850
He could be holding
anything black,

242
00:16:11,850 --> 00:16:14,650
especially if it was
dangling, you know,

243
00:16:14,650 --> 00:16:18,270
like a hunter
carrying a dead bird.

244
00:16:18,270 --> 00:16:21,460
Remember, he said
one time he just

245
00:16:21,460 --> 00:16:23,840
was removing a roll
of film-- of course,

246
00:16:23,840 --> 00:16:27,090
the film was in a black
reel, and it looks dark

247
00:16:27,090 --> 00:16:29,350
when it comes out of the camera.

248
00:16:29,350 --> 00:16:34,086
He was removing
film from a camera.

249
00:16:34,086 --> 00:16:35,710
Apparently, it had
been exposed, and he

250
00:16:35,710 --> 00:16:38,480
was going to get rid
of it, put new film in.

251
00:16:38,480 --> 00:16:40,690
And of course, he
unraveled it, and there's

252
00:16:40,690 --> 00:16:43,490
that dangling thing,
and immediately he

253
00:16:43,490 --> 00:16:47,460
was attacked by
jackdaws, because they

254
00:16:47,460 --> 00:16:52,020
have an innate reaction that's
in response to what we call

255
00:16:52,020 --> 00:16:57,330
key stimuli-- very simple
stimuli, usually are all that's

256
00:16:57,330 --> 00:17:00,970
necessary to elicit
fixed action patterns.

257
00:17:00,970 --> 00:17:06,940
It's not that these key
stimuli can't change over time,

258
00:17:06,940 --> 00:17:12,400
but initially the stimuli
are very, very simple.

259
00:17:12,400 --> 00:17:16,470
Over time some animals do
learn, and more complex stimuli

260
00:17:16,470 --> 00:17:22,060
come to elicit the
behavior, but with jackdaws,

261
00:17:22,060 --> 00:17:30,060
any dark, dangling object
will elicit the stimulus.

262
00:17:30,060 --> 00:17:33,310
Now how does
learning enter this?

263
00:17:36,530 --> 00:17:37,530
What do they learn?

264
00:17:37,530 --> 00:17:38,220
Somebody else.

265
00:17:41,550 --> 00:17:42,474
Yes?

266
00:17:42,474 --> 00:17:47,280
AUDIENCE: They also
have sort of a call that

267
00:17:47,280 --> 00:17:50,079
designates when one of
the members of the group

268
00:17:50,079 --> 00:17:51,620
sees something that
it has previously

269
00:17:51,620 --> 00:17:57,370
identified as being vicious
of a threat to the population.

270
00:17:57,370 --> 00:17:59,845
So other crows, when
they hear the sound,

271
00:17:59,845 --> 00:18:02,222
they realize that that
sound is the sound that

272
00:18:02,222 --> 00:18:03,805
designates the
presence of a predator,

273
00:18:03,805 --> 00:18:06,310
even if they haven't witnessed
the predator actually.

274
00:18:06,310 --> 00:18:07,310
PROFESSOR: That's right.

275
00:18:07,310 --> 00:18:10,630
They start calling-- this
zik-zik-zik-zik-zik--

276
00:18:10,630 --> 00:18:15,890
a very raspy kind of sound that
jackdaws make that indicates

277
00:18:15,890 --> 00:18:18,170
there's danger.

278
00:18:18,170 --> 00:18:22,860
But why would they do that?

279
00:18:22,860 --> 00:18:26,280
Humans aren't dangerous to them.

280
00:18:26,280 --> 00:18:30,440
It's because once you
do something like that,

281
00:18:30,440 --> 00:18:34,840
and you elicit that
innate reaction,

282
00:18:34,840 --> 00:18:38,900
it causes the animal
to emit that cry,

283
00:18:38,900 --> 00:18:45,140
and he actually learns
the face of the human.

284
00:18:45,140 --> 00:18:48,120
He doesn't react to
all humans that way.

285
00:18:48,120 --> 00:18:54,000
He reacts to the specific
human that did that.

286
00:18:54,000 --> 00:18:59,050
They become quote
"enemies of jackdaws."

287
00:18:59,050 --> 00:19:01,860
There are studies
done more recently

288
00:19:01,860 --> 00:19:06,220
based on the early
Lorenz studies of crows.

289
00:19:06,220 --> 00:19:08,670
For example, it
started in Japan,

290
00:19:08,670 --> 00:19:12,240
some very interesting
studies of crow behavior--

291
00:19:12,240 --> 00:19:16,020
not just cognitive behavior,
but innate reactions as well.

292
00:19:16,020 --> 00:19:19,300
But the studies done
in the US-- and I

293
00:19:19,300 --> 00:19:24,360
believe it's been done in other
countries, too-- investigated

294
00:19:24,360 --> 00:19:24,860
this.

295
00:19:24,860 --> 00:19:28,400
They would elicit that reaction.

296
00:19:28,400 --> 00:19:32,100
But they were wearing
masks, and the animal

297
00:19:32,100 --> 00:19:39,440
learned to recognize that mask
and would treat that person

298
00:19:39,440 --> 00:19:42,700
like an enemy if he
was wearing that mask.

299
00:19:42,700 --> 00:19:44,560
They were able to
show that it was

300
00:19:44,560 --> 00:19:46,810
very dependent on
the specific stimuli.

301
00:19:46,810 --> 00:19:49,980
It could even be a different
person, but wearing that mask,

302
00:19:49,980 --> 00:19:53,450
they were an enemy of crows.

303
00:19:53,450 --> 00:19:55,650
The reason they
did that experiment

304
00:19:55,650 --> 00:19:57,500
was a very interesting one.

305
00:19:57,500 --> 00:20:02,580
They wanted to see could
that crow-- and I don't

306
00:20:02,580 --> 00:20:04,580
know if this has been
done with jackdaws,

307
00:20:04,580 --> 00:20:08,605
but they're very similar
birds, both corvids,

308
00:20:08,605 --> 00:20:13,030
both very intelligent, and
both have very good memories--

309
00:20:13,030 --> 00:20:18,760
they wanted to see could that
knowledge of an enemy of crows

310
00:20:18,760 --> 00:20:20,620
be passed on to their offspring.

311
00:20:25,100 --> 00:20:29,940
They carefully
followed these animals

312
00:20:29,940 --> 00:20:35,220
with no more
exposure to that mask

313
00:20:35,220 --> 00:20:40,290
until the young were old
enough to fly and to make

314
00:20:40,290 --> 00:20:45,970
these sounds that would indicate
the recognizing an enemy.

315
00:20:45,970 --> 00:20:50,620
Then they started
using the mask again

316
00:20:50,620 --> 00:20:53,300
when no adults were around.

317
00:20:53,300 --> 00:20:58,320
They already knew that if the
young heard an adult making

318
00:20:58,320 --> 00:21:02,180
that sound, responding--
and of course, they actually

319
00:21:02,180 --> 00:21:04,160
are sensitive to
eye direction, they

320
00:21:04,160 --> 00:21:07,260
will see who the
jackdaw was looking at--

321
00:21:07,260 --> 00:21:10,050
and the young will
learn from the adults.

322
00:21:10,050 --> 00:21:12,830
But in this case,
they waited until only

323
00:21:12,830 --> 00:21:13,945
the young were around.

324
00:21:21,600 --> 00:21:24,340
They found that
if that young had

325
00:21:24,340 --> 00:21:28,490
lived with the adult a
sufficient amount of time--

326
00:21:28,490 --> 00:21:35,430
obviously, they didn't even know
when the adult had responded

327
00:21:35,430 --> 00:21:38,890
to the mask-- but if
the young was around,

328
00:21:38,890 --> 00:21:45,150
could learn from the adult that
just the visual shape indicated

329
00:21:45,150 --> 00:21:46,660
an enemy.

330
00:21:46,660 --> 00:21:49,980
Obviously they had to be
exposed in order to learn,

331
00:21:49,980 --> 00:21:53,630
but they didn't have to be
experience the stimulus itself.

332
00:21:53,630 --> 00:21:56,540
They never had to see the
black, dangling object.

333
00:21:56,540 --> 00:22:01,830
They only had to hear their
parent, and they could learn.

334
00:22:01,830 --> 00:22:04,370
So traditions could
develop then in a group.

335
00:22:04,370 --> 00:22:06,800
It's dangerous to do
that around jackdaws.

336
00:22:06,800 --> 00:22:09,460
You can become an enemy of
jackdaws for a long time.

337
00:22:18,050 --> 00:22:20,840
This is an animal,
the Golden Eagle,

338
00:22:20,840 --> 00:22:27,015
that are enemies of jackdaws,
real enemies of jackdaws.

339
00:22:31,860 --> 00:22:34,200
Many birds do have
innate responses

340
00:22:34,200 --> 00:22:38,570
to certain kinds
of flight patterns.

341
00:22:38,570 --> 00:22:42,360
The Golden Eagle flight
pattern is one of those

342
00:22:42,360 --> 00:22:45,700
that, with a certain
characteristic of their flight,

343
00:22:45,700 --> 00:22:49,300
that will elicit escape
reactions of various sorts

344
00:22:49,300 --> 00:22:52,410
and these cries
from various birds.

345
00:22:57,430 --> 00:23:02,560
Now what about can they learn
to recognize individuals?

346
00:23:02,560 --> 00:23:04,980
We already mentioned
that they could recognize

347
00:23:04,980 --> 00:23:07,810
individual humans,
because they can

348
00:23:07,810 --> 00:23:11,540
recognize an individual human,
one particular type of human,

349
00:23:11,540 --> 00:23:17,020
or a particular mask as
an enemy of jackdaws,

350
00:23:17,020 --> 00:23:19,910
but what about other jackdaws?

351
00:23:19,910 --> 00:23:24,120
What is the evidence--
and it's of several sorts,

352
00:23:24,120 --> 00:23:27,320
if you study jackdaw
social behavior-- what

353
00:23:27,320 --> 00:23:29,620
was the evidence
that Lorenz presents

354
00:23:29,620 --> 00:23:34,760
that shows that they can
recognize each other?

355
00:23:34,760 --> 00:23:37,700
Unless you really keep jackdaws,
and you're observing them

356
00:23:37,700 --> 00:23:39,950
all the time, they all
look pretty similar to you.

357
00:23:44,690 --> 00:23:46,970
But they start
looking different when

358
00:23:46,970 --> 00:23:49,360
you're very, very
familiar with them.

359
00:23:49,360 --> 00:23:50,750
Remember, in the
Kittiwake gulls,

360
00:23:50,750 --> 00:23:54,500
they had to pay attention to the
details of their wing patterns

361
00:23:54,500 --> 00:23:56,530
in order to be able
to tell them apart.

362
00:23:56,530 --> 00:23:59,340
Jackdaws don't have
patterns like that,

363
00:23:59,340 --> 00:24:02,670
but they're a little bit
different in how heavy they

364
00:24:02,670 --> 00:24:06,520
are, the way they fluff their
feathers, in their weight,

365
00:24:06,520 --> 00:24:09,620
the sheen of their
feathers, and they're

366
00:24:09,620 --> 00:24:12,240
different in their behavior.

367
00:24:12,240 --> 00:24:13,855
All those things
can lead to cues

368
00:24:13,855 --> 00:24:15,710
that someone watching
them all the time

369
00:24:15,710 --> 00:24:17,320
can learn to recognize.

370
00:24:17,320 --> 00:24:19,080
Hamsters are
similar-- very, very

371
00:24:19,080 --> 00:24:22,010
difficult to tell them apart.

372
00:24:22,010 --> 00:24:24,180
It's mainly, in
fact, unless they're

373
00:24:24,180 --> 00:24:28,680
very different in weight-- you
can recognize the sexes very

374
00:24:28,680 --> 00:24:30,760
easily.

375
00:24:30,760 --> 00:24:34,640
Otherwise, it's just in
the behavioral pattern

376
00:24:34,640 --> 00:24:36,290
you learn to tell
the difference.

377
00:24:39,730 --> 00:24:44,400
So how do we know jackdaws
can recognize, much more

378
00:24:44,400 --> 00:24:47,150
quickly than humans, in
fact, individual jackdaws?

379
00:24:50,011 --> 00:24:51,010
What would you look for?

380
00:24:56,290 --> 00:24:57,142
Yes, in the back?

381
00:24:57,142 --> 00:24:59,350
AUDIENCE: There's an
established pecking order, which

382
00:24:59,350 --> 00:25:02,710
means that in order to feed,
somebody at the top would--

383
00:25:02,710 --> 00:25:05,690
PROFESSOR: Yeah, social
dominance rank, exactly.

384
00:25:05,690 --> 00:25:10,220
We call it the pecking
order, as you said.

385
00:25:10,220 --> 00:25:14,000
They can consistently
recognize who's

386
00:25:14,000 --> 00:25:16,100
at the bottom,
who's in the middle.

387
00:25:16,100 --> 00:25:20,660
They recognize their rank
with respect to other animals.

388
00:25:20,660 --> 00:25:25,020
They know where they are
in that pecking order.

389
00:25:25,020 --> 00:25:28,330
They know who the
dominant jackdaw is.

390
00:25:28,330 --> 00:25:29,640
They know the relative rank.

391
00:25:29,640 --> 00:25:32,180
They know who his mate is.

392
00:25:32,180 --> 00:25:34,770
Generally the female--
it's almost always a male,

393
00:25:34,770 --> 00:25:37,930
but not always, but let's say
it's a male-- then that female,

394
00:25:37,930 --> 00:25:40,040
once she becomes the
mate to that male,

395
00:25:40,040 --> 00:25:43,300
she's going to have
the high rank, too.

396
00:25:43,300 --> 00:25:46,059
They all learn
that very quickly.

397
00:25:46,059 --> 00:25:47,100
They know where they fit.

398
00:25:50,400 --> 00:25:53,800
Another way of
course, is when they

399
00:25:53,800 --> 00:25:57,510
mate, they recognize their mate.

400
00:26:07,810 --> 00:26:10,880
Of course, they do recognize
friends and enemies.

401
00:26:10,880 --> 00:26:13,830
I put enemies in quotes
here, because if there's

402
00:26:13,830 --> 00:26:17,190
any real enemy, then all
the jackdaws are friends,

403
00:26:17,190 --> 00:26:19,260
and they support each other.

404
00:26:19,260 --> 00:26:21,380
But otherwise in normal
social behaviors,

405
00:26:21,380 --> 00:26:24,040
they're more friendly with
some birds than others,

406
00:26:24,040 --> 00:26:26,550
and this is consistent.

407
00:26:26,550 --> 00:26:31,160
It's obvious that they
can recognize each other.

408
00:26:31,160 --> 00:26:34,650
How do mammals do it?

409
00:26:34,650 --> 00:26:39,460
Well certainly for the very
visual animals, the primates

410
00:26:39,460 --> 00:26:44,190
and other very visual animals
like giraffes, as an example,

411
00:26:44,190 --> 00:26:49,350
they also use visual cues
to recognize individuals.

412
00:26:49,350 --> 00:26:53,260
But in most mammals,
especially nocturnal mammals,

413
00:26:53,260 --> 00:26:55,510
olfaction is much
more important,

414
00:26:55,510 --> 00:26:59,890
and they recognize
individual odor patterns.

415
00:26:59,890 --> 00:27:06,170
Even animals like dogs--
different breeds of dogs

416
00:27:06,170 --> 00:27:09,107
look very different
to us-- but to dogs,

417
00:27:09,107 --> 00:27:10,565
their smell is even
more important.

418
00:27:28,860 --> 00:27:33,925
There's been more formal studies
of some of that in crows.

419
00:27:37,090 --> 00:27:41,720
A lot of things that
Lorenz observed and gave

420
00:27:41,720 --> 00:27:45,300
detailed observations about--
he did do simple experiments

421
00:27:45,300 --> 00:27:48,280
with his jackdaws--
but a lot of those

422
00:27:48,280 --> 00:27:50,880
have been followed up--
not so much with jackdaws,

423
00:27:50,880 --> 00:27:54,040
but with other corvids
in experimental work--

424
00:27:54,040 --> 00:27:56,590
and most of Lawrence's
observations

425
00:27:56,590 --> 00:27:57,690
have been supported.

426
00:28:01,090 --> 00:28:03,000
In this question,
I'm just pointing out

427
00:28:03,000 --> 00:28:06,700
that the male jackdaw
lacks the plumage

428
00:28:06,700 --> 00:28:09,110
of a peacock for displaying
towards a female.

429
00:28:12,180 --> 00:28:16,330
Then how does the
young jackdaw who

430
00:28:16,330 --> 00:28:19,340
gets attracted-- he falls in
love with a female jackdaw--

431
00:28:19,340 --> 00:28:24,400
how does he get her
attention and try

432
00:28:24,400 --> 00:28:27,560
to get a positive response?

433
00:28:27,560 --> 00:28:29,200
It must be through
his behavior, right?

434
00:28:40,670 --> 00:28:46,920
He has a specific ceremony for
calling a female to his nest.

435
00:28:46,920 --> 00:28:53,690
It has auditory components,
or the way he calls,

436
00:28:53,690 --> 00:28:57,390
and it also has
visual components.

437
00:28:57,390 --> 00:29:01,040
These do elicit response
in other animals

438
00:29:01,040 --> 00:29:04,910
if they decide to attend to him.

439
00:29:04,910 --> 00:29:10,180
If a female is interested
in finding a mate too,

440
00:29:10,180 --> 00:29:14,370
she will attend more to
some males than others.

441
00:29:14,370 --> 00:29:16,850
When she attends,
then she will begin

442
00:29:16,850 --> 00:29:18,140
to respond to these stimuli.

443
00:29:22,410 --> 00:29:25,960
He points out that he
noticed sex differences

444
00:29:25,960 --> 00:29:31,220
in eye direction, very
reminiscent of human behavior.

445
00:29:31,220 --> 00:29:37,120
For example, what we
call coyness in humans--

446
00:29:37,120 --> 00:29:40,020
they attend to, but they
don't stare directly

447
00:29:40,020 --> 00:29:42,070
at a potential mate.

448
00:29:42,070 --> 00:29:45,310
This is the female
responding to the male.

449
00:29:45,310 --> 00:29:46,940
She doesn't look
directly at him.

450
00:29:46,940 --> 00:29:49,520
He might be staring at her,
but she doesn't look directly,

451
00:29:49,520 --> 00:29:51,680
but she's also really
attending to him.

452
00:29:55,210 --> 00:29:59,770
This can go on for
quite a long time.

453
00:29:59,770 --> 00:30:04,340
How do you tell when a bird
is looking or not looking?

454
00:30:04,340 --> 00:30:07,980
Unless they're owls, they've
got laterally-placed eyes,

455
00:30:07,980 --> 00:30:11,130
so they could seem to
be facing over here,

456
00:30:11,130 --> 00:30:12,920
but they could still
be looking over here.

457
00:30:12,920 --> 00:30:17,150
Because their eyes are dark, you
can't actually see the pupil.

458
00:30:17,150 --> 00:30:19,470
The jackdaws are
amazing in their ability

459
00:30:19,470 --> 00:30:24,070
to tell what the bird is
actually attending to,

460
00:30:24,070 --> 00:30:26,980
because the male
won't struggle forever

461
00:30:26,980 --> 00:30:28,560
to gain the attention
of the female

462
00:30:28,560 --> 00:30:30,710
if she is totally ignoring him.

463
00:30:30,710 --> 00:30:33,850
In fact, she'll
eventually just fly away.

464
00:30:33,850 --> 00:30:35,960
But if she is interested,
she won't fly away,

465
00:30:35,960 --> 00:30:41,410
but she won't directly
respond for a long time.

466
00:30:41,410 --> 00:30:46,290
How does she respond if
she is really interested?

467
00:30:46,290 --> 00:30:51,820
How does she get
engaged to that male?

468
00:30:51,820 --> 00:30:54,150
Lorenz points out that
it happens a full year

469
00:30:54,150 --> 00:30:57,830
before they actually
start mating.

470
00:30:57,830 --> 00:31:02,260
So unlike many
species, these animals

471
00:31:02,260 --> 00:31:06,470
have this betrothal
ceremony a year

472
00:31:06,470 --> 00:31:08,570
before they actually
start mating.

473
00:31:13,170 --> 00:31:19,200
What she does is engage in
this ritual mating invitation.

474
00:31:19,200 --> 00:31:21,750
It's a particular posture.

475
00:31:21,750 --> 00:31:26,030
They crouch down, fluff their
feathers in a certain way,

476
00:31:26,030 --> 00:31:28,670
widen their wings a little bit.

477
00:31:28,670 --> 00:31:33,740
It's used throughout life,
later as a greeting ceremony,

478
00:31:33,740 --> 00:31:36,880
in a pair of jackdaws.

479
00:31:36,880 --> 00:31:40,780
Lorenz has some nice
drawings of that in the book.

480
00:31:40,780 --> 00:31:43,910
This is a typical
posturing that animals

481
00:31:43,910 --> 00:31:46,660
do that has a specific
communication function.

482
00:31:53,250 --> 00:32:00,940
Once they are betrothed, even
before they've started to mate,

483
00:32:00,940 --> 00:32:07,710
Lorenz describes two behaviors
that occur frequently

484
00:32:07,710 --> 00:32:09,350
in a pair of jackdaws.

485
00:32:12,920 --> 00:32:18,010
And when they pair,
how long does it last?

486
00:32:18,010 --> 00:32:22,400
Many animals will mate with
only one animal in a season,

487
00:32:22,400 --> 00:32:26,500
but the next season,
there's no preference

488
00:32:26,500 --> 00:32:29,150
for the original mate.

489
00:32:29,150 --> 00:32:31,470
But other animals,
it's very different.

490
00:32:31,470 --> 00:32:34,530
Some animals are promiscuous
even within the mating season.

491
00:32:34,530 --> 00:32:37,860
They'll mate with many
different animals.

492
00:32:37,860 --> 00:32:40,380
What is it for jackdaws?

493
00:32:40,380 --> 00:32:42,330
They're monogamous, generally.

494
00:32:42,330 --> 00:32:44,300
They mate for life.

495
00:32:44,300 --> 00:32:45,675
Once they mate, that's it.

496
00:32:49,810 --> 00:32:57,570
That early posturing and
the displays they show

497
00:32:57,570 --> 00:33:02,800
can result in a lifetime
of companionship

498
00:33:02,800 --> 00:33:07,570
that, in jackdaws, which
are very long-lived birds,

499
00:33:07,570 --> 00:33:10,740
can last for 20 years.

500
00:33:16,800 --> 00:33:21,230
Because of this, you
could say they're

501
00:33:21,230 --> 00:33:23,650
married when they start
mating, but their engagement

502
00:33:23,650 --> 00:33:27,370
is a full year beforehand,
if we use the human terms.

503
00:33:27,370 --> 00:33:29,660
Lorenz uses the human
terms pretty freely,

504
00:33:29,660 --> 00:33:32,490
because it's pretty obvious
he's talking about the birds

505
00:33:32,490 --> 00:33:35,140
when he's talking about them.

506
00:33:35,140 --> 00:33:37,490
These are the two
behaviors then.

507
00:33:37,490 --> 00:33:40,960
When these occur, then you
know that that pair has formed.

508
00:33:45,180 --> 00:33:52,230
The male will feed the female,
and the female will preen

509
00:33:52,230 --> 00:33:57,760
the feathers of the male,
particularly in the areas

510
00:33:57,760 --> 00:34:00,680
of his neck and head that
he cannot reach himself.

511
00:34:03,330 --> 00:34:05,630
They also make these
sounds that you

512
00:34:05,630 --> 00:34:07,880
don't hear, except
in this situation

513
00:34:07,880 --> 00:34:09,259
and in infant jackdaws.

514
00:34:11,770 --> 00:34:15,540
It's very common in many
different species for courtship

515
00:34:15,540 --> 00:34:20,027
to involve these more
infantile behaviors.

516
00:34:20,027 --> 00:34:21,094
It occurs in humans.

517
00:34:27,880 --> 00:34:32,015
He describes some of that
behavior in more detail.

518
00:34:35,310 --> 00:34:39,480
Here's the female
getting fed by the male.

519
00:34:43,300 --> 00:34:48,639
Literally he's poked some-- or
has already finished perhaps

520
00:34:48,639 --> 00:34:52,530
putting an insect in her mouth.

521
00:34:52,530 --> 00:34:56,070
This is very common behavior
during a courtship period,

522
00:34:56,070 --> 00:34:59,400
but it can occur later,
too, throughout their lives.

523
00:35:02,980 --> 00:35:06,260
Jackdaws are very social, and
they form close-knit groups,

524
00:35:06,260 --> 00:35:08,660
but it doesn't mean
they don't squabble.

525
00:35:08,660 --> 00:35:12,290
You get conflicts
over nest sites,

526
00:35:12,290 --> 00:35:14,410
for example, just
like the Kittiwakes.

527
00:35:17,260 --> 00:35:20,270
Some nest sites are a lot
more conveniently placed

528
00:35:20,270 --> 00:35:22,380
than others, so they
will fight to get them.

529
00:35:25,970 --> 00:35:31,510
Each male has to establish
the nest and nest site

530
00:35:31,510 --> 00:35:34,750
and attract his female to it.

531
00:35:37,720 --> 00:35:40,920
The conflicts are often
settled by the kinds

532
00:35:40,920 --> 00:35:47,570
of postures-- displays,
aggressive displays they make.

533
00:35:47,570 --> 00:35:50,640
Similarly, there are
defensive displays

534
00:35:50,640 --> 00:35:55,775
that will stop the
aggressiveness of the attacker.

535
00:36:00,200 --> 00:36:02,600
They will do this,
the nest site,

536
00:36:02,600 --> 00:36:07,890
and when they engage in
this very loud calling,

537
00:36:07,890 --> 00:36:11,600
it's apparently in one
season of the year, which

538
00:36:11,600 --> 00:36:15,620
in Altenberg, Germany,
is February and March.

539
00:36:15,620 --> 00:36:22,890
The whole town is filled with
this loud-- zik-zik-ziking

540
00:36:22,890 --> 00:36:23,716
of the jackdaws.

541
00:36:26,320 --> 00:36:32,680
So what happens if the defending
jackdaws actually attack.

542
00:36:32,680 --> 00:36:36,370
And that does happen,
where a jackdaw

543
00:36:36,370 --> 00:36:40,040
stops just his aggressive
posturing and decides-- hey,

544
00:36:40,040 --> 00:36:43,020
I've got a real chance
to get this nest site

545
00:36:43,020 --> 00:36:44,580
and he attacks the bird.

546
00:36:44,580 --> 00:36:47,950
He perceives him as weaker.

547
00:36:47,950 --> 00:36:49,250
What happens?

548
00:36:49,250 --> 00:36:50,110
Yeah.

549
00:36:50,110 --> 00:36:52,170
AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE].

550
00:36:52,170 --> 00:36:53,220
PROFESSOR: Sorry, louder.

551
00:36:53,220 --> 00:36:54,136
AUDIENCE: [INAUDIBLE].

552
00:36:58,560 --> 00:37:04,930
PROFESSOR: Yeah, it
actually results in a melee.

553
00:37:04,930 --> 00:37:06,990
It gets all the birds involved.

554
00:37:06,990 --> 00:37:08,530
They all start this.

555
00:37:13,560 --> 00:37:17,370
The zik-zik sounds
become louder,

556
00:37:17,370 --> 00:37:19,680
and pretty soon there's
a whole congregation

557
00:37:19,680 --> 00:37:21,910
of animals making this noise.

558
00:37:21,910 --> 00:37:24,850
And pretty soon, it gets so
confusing that even the animal

559
00:37:24,850 --> 00:37:29,910
that was initially
attacking or defending,

560
00:37:29,910 --> 00:37:31,970
they'll all start doing it.

561
00:37:31,970 --> 00:37:34,970
It's totally confusing.

562
00:37:34,970 --> 00:37:37,800
Even the guy who started
it, he's joining that crowd,

563
00:37:37,800 --> 00:37:43,730
and pretty soon it all just
gradually goes back to normal,

564
00:37:43,730 --> 00:37:47,120
and they all become
un-aggressive again.

565
00:37:47,120 --> 00:37:51,260
They've got this built-in social
behavior that protects them

566
00:37:51,260 --> 00:37:55,280
from too much damage by
actual social attacks.

567
00:37:55,280 --> 00:37:58,770
Many species have this.

568
00:37:58,770 --> 00:38:00,940
Humans have it, too.

569
00:38:00,940 --> 00:38:04,300
We ruined it by
developing weapons.

570
00:38:04,300 --> 00:38:06,510
Then we don't have
to face somebody.

571
00:38:06,510 --> 00:38:11,890
We can kill them at a
distance-- terrible thing.

572
00:38:11,890 --> 00:38:13,650
Just think if animals had guns.

573
00:38:18,910 --> 00:38:20,630
So most animals
have these means.

574
00:38:20,630 --> 00:38:23,990
It's not that animals never kill
each other, but it's very rare.

575
00:38:30,210 --> 00:38:35,290
There are also innate responses
to get a young one who,

576
00:38:35,290 --> 00:38:38,680
when he's flying becomes very
adventurous and very energetic

577
00:38:38,680 --> 00:38:43,090
and might fly so far from
home that he gets lost,

578
00:38:43,090 --> 00:38:44,820
and it would be
difficult for him even

579
00:38:44,820 --> 00:38:47,150
to find his way back--
so the older jackdaws

580
00:38:47,150 --> 00:38:51,680
will try to entice a
young one that's missing.

581
00:38:51,680 --> 00:38:55,510
They will find him, and they of
course, have very good vision.

582
00:38:55,510 --> 00:38:58,986
They can fly up and
often find the young

583
00:38:58,986 --> 00:39:01,230
that are straying so far.

584
00:39:01,230 --> 00:39:03,160
How do they get
them to come back?

585
00:39:03,160 --> 00:39:06,090
It's done by, again,
the combination

586
00:39:06,090 --> 00:39:09,430
of the auditory and
the visual stimuli.

587
00:39:09,430 --> 00:39:11,670
They have this fly with me call.

588
00:39:11,670 --> 00:39:16,210
The kya-kya sound, and
it changes a little bit

589
00:39:16,210 --> 00:39:21,060
to what Lorenz calls
a kya sound, slightly

590
00:39:21,060 --> 00:39:22,360
different in the way it sounds.

591
00:39:25,180 --> 00:39:28,130
will make this sound,
flying at the young bird,

592
00:39:28,130 --> 00:39:30,860
and then they will
turn and fly away.

593
00:39:30,860 --> 00:39:35,250
And as they fly away, that
produces a visual stimulus

594
00:39:35,250 --> 00:39:41,380
that the young jackdaw finds
very hard not to follow.

595
00:39:41,380 --> 00:39:44,980
The combination of that
loud sound they're making,

596
00:39:44,980 --> 00:39:49,390
plus the way they're
flying, serves as innate

597
00:39:49,390 --> 00:39:51,980
releasing stimuli,
we would call them.

598
00:39:51,980 --> 00:39:55,150
Provide the key stimulus to
get the following response--

599
00:39:55,150 --> 00:39:57,600
and they fly after
the older animal.

600
00:40:02,080 --> 00:40:03,675
What time are we at, here?

601
00:40:09,600 --> 00:40:11,610
I didn't put this
in the journal file.

602
00:40:11,610 --> 00:40:14,750
I will go to the PowerPoint.

603
00:40:14,750 --> 00:40:21,040
I want to get started here
with more specific discussion

604
00:40:21,040 --> 00:40:23,760
of innate behavior.

605
00:40:23,760 --> 00:40:29,117
The technical term in ethology
is the fixed action pattern.

606
00:40:29,117 --> 00:40:30,950
That will lead to a
little bit of discussion

607
00:40:30,950 --> 00:40:32,250
of the central nervous system.

608
00:40:32,250 --> 00:40:35,350
We won't be talking
a lot about the CNS,

609
00:40:35,350 --> 00:40:38,510
but we will talk about it.

610
00:40:38,510 --> 00:40:41,980
Next time I will
show you the film.

611
00:40:41,980 --> 00:40:45,710
It's from a TV program, The
Wild Wild World of Animals,

612
00:40:45,710 --> 00:40:53,870
but it's a historic film that
shows Lorenz and his ducks that

613
00:40:53,870 --> 00:40:55,260
were imprinted on him.

614
00:40:58,700 --> 00:41:00,940
Then the film goes on.

615
00:41:00,940 --> 00:41:05,960
It films some of the work
of Lorenz and his students

616
00:41:05,960 --> 00:41:09,730
and coworkers, showing
natural response to predators

617
00:41:09,730 --> 00:41:13,730
by geese and some
of the work they've

618
00:41:13,730 --> 00:41:17,590
done on imprinting and
the effects on social life

619
00:41:17,590 --> 00:41:18,345
by geese.

620
00:41:21,670 --> 00:41:23,650
We'll talk about the
innate responses.

621
00:41:23,650 --> 00:41:28,370
I'll go through this next time,
some of the stimuli they used.

622
00:41:28,370 --> 00:41:31,030
But let's talk about
fixed action patterns.

623
00:41:31,030 --> 00:41:33,530
We have at least
time to define it.

624
00:41:38,060 --> 00:41:41,420
This will come up again in
the class, and I can tell you,

625
00:41:41,420 --> 00:41:44,390
many students get confused
about some of this,

626
00:41:44,390 --> 00:41:49,400
so I'd like to go through
it more than once.

627
00:41:49,400 --> 00:41:51,590
What is a fixed action pattern?

628
00:41:51,590 --> 00:41:53,360
When we think of a
fixed-action pattern,

629
00:41:53,360 --> 00:41:56,200
it sounds like we're
just talking about what,

630
00:41:56,200 --> 00:41:59,320
to the ethologist, is only one
component in the fixed action

631
00:41:59,320 --> 00:42:02,920
pattern-- the motor pattern,
the fixed motor pattern,

632
00:42:02,920 --> 00:42:05,250
an innate sequence of behavior.

633
00:42:08,020 --> 00:42:12,500
These are examples in
the human-- smiling,

634
00:42:12,500 --> 00:42:15,940
frowning, many other
expressions of emotion.

635
00:42:15,940 --> 00:42:21,150
They're the same or very
similar in all humans,

636
00:42:21,150 --> 00:42:24,970
in different cultures, in fact.

637
00:42:24,970 --> 00:42:27,530
They're similar, as
Eibesfeldt showed,

638
00:42:27,530 --> 00:42:31,280
in humans that have never
seen another human doing it,

639
00:42:31,280 --> 00:42:34,870
because they were going blind
or even born blind and deaf.

640
00:42:34,870 --> 00:42:36,970
Yet they do it.

641
00:42:36,970 --> 00:42:40,400
Walking is another
fixed action pattern.

642
00:42:40,400 --> 00:42:43,520
It's a particularly important,
multi-purpose pattern

643
00:42:43,520 --> 00:42:44,110
of action.

644
00:42:46,920 --> 00:42:51,695
Eye blink and swallowing
are fixed action patterns.

645
00:42:55,530 --> 00:42:57,560
Why are we calling them
fixed action patterns?

646
00:42:57,560 --> 00:43:00,290
Those last two, eye-blink
and swallowing are,

647
00:43:00,290 --> 00:43:02,240
if you read in
the medical texts,

648
00:43:02,240 --> 00:43:08,106
they're called reflexes,
swallowing reflex and eye-blink

649
00:43:08,106 --> 00:43:08,605
reflex.

650
00:43:12,600 --> 00:43:17,210
Is a fixed action pattern
any different from a reflex?

651
00:43:17,210 --> 00:43:19,910
Isn't it just a
more complex reflex?

652
00:43:19,910 --> 00:43:22,290
So we'll call that a reflex
if it's something very simple

653
00:43:22,290 --> 00:43:26,046
like withdrawal of a limb
from a painful stimulus,

654
00:43:26,046 --> 00:43:28,046
but we'll call it a fixed
action pattern if it's

655
00:43:28,046 --> 00:43:29,170
a more complex sequence.

656
00:43:33,070 --> 00:43:35,560
The author of that little
book I'm having you

657
00:43:35,560 --> 00:43:39,800
read, Graham Scott--
actually that's

658
00:43:39,800 --> 00:43:41,160
the way he uses the term.

659
00:43:50,210 --> 00:43:52,250
He really just means automatic.

660
00:43:52,250 --> 00:43:53,630
That's what he means by reflex.

661
00:43:53,630 --> 00:43:55,430
It's something that
happens automatically

662
00:43:55,430 --> 00:43:57,340
with a certain stimulus.

663
00:43:57,340 --> 00:44:00,320
But is that not what a
fixed action pattern is?

664
00:44:00,320 --> 00:44:02,270
And the answer is no.

665
00:44:02,270 --> 00:44:05,207
We will follow Konrad
Lorenz in talking about it.

666
00:44:09,080 --> 00:44:13,480
I want you to learn the Lorenz
view, which distinguishes

667
00:44:13,480 --> 00:44:17,190
pretty clearly between fixed
action pattern and reflex.

668
00:44:17,190 --> 00:44:20,290
A reflex is something
that's always there,

669
00:44:20,290 --> 00:44:22,780
no matter what my
motivational state.

670
00:44:22,780 --> 00:44:26,580
When I'm walking, I'm
responding in a reflex way

671
00:44:26,580 --> 00:44:29,440
to stimuli from my feet.

672
00:44:29,440 --> 00:44:36,600
If I'm on uneven terrain, I
adjust my gait to the terrain.

673
00:44:36,600 --> 00:44:39,110
Some species do that
much better than others,

674
00:44:39,110 --> 00:44:44,800
like a goat or a
donkey, in fact,

675
00:44:44,800 --> 00:44:49,220
or a mule does it much
better than a horse.

676
00:44:49,220 --> 00:44:52,070
Horses evolved to
run on the plains.

677
00:44:52,070 --> 00:44:57,700
These other animals evolved
to live in hillier terrain,

678
00:44:57,700 --> 00:45:00,900
so we talk about some animals
being more sure-footed

679
00:45:00,900 --> 00:45:01,410
than others.

680
00:45:01,410 --> 00:45:03,540
There's just a difference
in the reflex patterns

681
00:45:03,540 --> 00:45:04,498
that they've inherited.

682
00:45:07,160 --> 00:45:09,570
But why am I saying
those are reflexes?

683
00:45:09,570 --> 00:45:13,110
Because a reflex is
something like a mantle

684
00:45:13,110 --> 00:45:14,295
you're always wearing.

685
00:45:14,295 --> 00:45:17,670
It doesn't matter whether
you're hungry or not hungry,

686
00:45:17,670 --> 00:45:19,540
whether your horny
or not horny-- no

687
00:45:19,540 --> 00:45:21,250
matter what your
motivational state,

688
00:45:21,250 --> 00:45:24,010
you still have
those same reflexes.

689
00:45:24,010 --> 00:45:27,000
It's a background.

690
00:45:27,000 --> 00:45:28,700
That's why we call
it just a mantle.

691
00:45:28,700 --> 00:45:32,300
You always have that.

692
00:45:32,300 --> 00:45:34,750
But what about a
fixed action pattern?

693
00:45:34,750 --> 00:45:38,400
It has a motivational component.

694
00:45:38,400 --> 00:45:40,500
So I go through that here.

695
00:45:43,680 --> 00:45:47,210
A component of the
fixed-action pattern

696
00:45:47,210 --> 00:45:51,390
is what Lorenz called-- and
different psychologists have

697
00:45:51,390 --> 00:45:53,610
used different names for this.

698
00:45:53,610 --> 00:45:58,360
In the West we often just
talk about a drive or level

699
00:45:58,360 --> 00:46:04,370
of motivation, but the
ethologists following Lorenz

700
00:46:04,370 --> 00:46:05,615
have been much more specific.

701
00:46:08,450 --> 00:46:13,690
He calls it an
action-specific potential.

702
00:46:13,690 --> 00:46:18,640
Something in the brain that
can change in its level,

703
00:46:18,640 --> 00:46:22,750
is specific to a specific
action, a specific motor

704
00:46:22,750 --> 00:46:25,210
pattern.

705
00:46:25,210 --> 00:46:28,100
It's an internal
level of activation

706
00:46:28,100 --> 00:46:33,440
of a drive or a central
motivational state.

707
00:46:33,440 --> 00:46:35,470
It's been called the
central motive state

708
00:46:35,470 --> 00:46:38,700
by the psychologist,
Peter Milner.

709
00:46:38,700 --> 00:46:41,530
He was a physiological
psychologist--

710
00:46:41,530 --> 00:46:43,870
or is-- in Canada.

711
00:46:43,870 --> 00:46:46,770
Many people here
just call it a drive.

712
00:46:46,770 --> 00:46:51,660
The action-specific potential
for most fixed action patterns

713
00:46:51,660 --> 00:46:56,020
builds up pretty
steadily over time.

714
00:46:56,020 --> 00:46:58,840
And what that does is
increases the probability

715
00:46:58,840 --> 00:47:02,390
of discharge of
the motor pattern.

716
00:47:02,390 --> 00:47:06,020
How it does that is the
thresholds for eliciting

717
00:47:06,020 --> 00:47:10,240
the fixed-motor
pattern become lowered.

718
00:47:10,240 --> 00:47:13,740
In fact, they can get so
low, if the level of drive

719
00:47:13,740 --> 00:47:17,780
is very, very high, that almost
any stimulus can elicit it.

720
00:47:17,780 --> 00:47:19,780
When that happens,
we could say well

721
00:47:19,780 --> 00:47:24,140
it's like they're discharged in
a vacuum, almost no stimulus,

722
00:47:24,140 --> 00:47:27,500
but all it is is this extreme
lowering of thresholds

723
00:47:27,500 --> 00:47:29,295
for eliciting the
fixed action pattern.

724
00:47:29,295 --> 00:47:31,420
That doesn't happen
with reflexes.

725
00:47:31,420 --> 00:47:33,490
The threshold for
eliciting reflex

726
00:47:33,490 --> 00:47:36,580
does change with
current conditions.

727
00:47:36,580 --> 00:47:39,490
Like the tendency
to withdraw my limb,

728
00:47:39,490 --> 00:47:44,810
the t tendency will
increase if I'm frightened.

729
00:47:44,810 --> 00:47:49,315
Say I go into a dark basement,
and somebody tells me there

730
00:47:49,315 --> 00:47:51,710
are rats down there, I'm
going to be much more

731
00:47:51,710 --> 00:47:55,910
likely to withdraw if I touch
something I wasn't expecting.

732
00:47:55,910 --> 00:47:59,230
But that's not a
fixed action pattern.

733
00:47:59,230 --> 00:48:01,740
It's a simple reflex
that's threshold

734
00:48:01,740 --> 00:48:05,300
has been adjusted by
the current situation.

735
00:48:05,300 --> 00:48:08,840
But the motivational level
of a fixed action pattern

736
00:48:08,840 --> 00:48:14,440
will change steadily over time,
regardless of the situation.

737
00:48:14,440 --> 00:48:17,260
The stimuli you're
exposed to, though,

738
00:48:17,260 --> 00:48:22,090
can be the major way that
its [INAUDIBLE] will change.

739
00:48:22,090 --> 00:48:25,170
Its level of activation
will change, so in that way

740
00:48:25,170 --> 00:48:29,025
it is a little
similar to a reflex.

741
00:48:29,025 --> 00:48:30,150
That's the end of the hour.

742
00:48:30,150 --> 00:48:33,710
We're going to come back
to this slide next time

743
00:48:33,710 --> 00:48:38,040
and start there after
we see the film.